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Prescribing Sound: Willem Van de Wall and the Carceral Origins of American Music Therapy
- Source :
- Modern American History. 3:109-132
- Publication Year :
- 2020
- Publisher :
- Cambridge University Press (CUP), 2020.
-
Abstract
- From 1921 until 1936, musician Willem Van de Wall pioneered the modern use of therapeutic music in American prisons and psychiatric institutions. His therapy was steeped in the methods and philosophy of social control, and after World War II, it shaped the professionalizing field of music therapy. Van de Wall's influence reveals an overlooked connection between modern clinical practice and the techniques of control employed in prisons and psychiatric hospitals of the early twentieth century. Given music therapy's broader impact as an element of postwar self-help culture, its relationship to social control practices also disrupts longstanding scholarly ideas about the so-called “therapeutic ethos.” The therapeutic ethos did not originate solely in efforts by the middle classes to adjust to bourgeois modernity. The case of music therapy suggests that some elements of “therapeutic culture” were always coercive and always directed toward the maintenance of race, gender, and class hierarchies.
- Subjects :
- 030506 rehabilitation
History
Music therapy
Modernity
media_common.quotation_subject
Field (Bourdieu)
World War II
06 humanities and the arts
humanities
060404 music
Ethos
03 medical and health sciences
Aesthetics
Bourgeoisie
Sociology
Element (criminal law)
0305 other medical science
0604 arts
Social control
media_common
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 23971851 and 25150456
- Volume :
- 3
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Modern American History
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi...........35d035752559a111049a07a77238b4cd
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1017/mah.2020.11